3 research outputs found
Evaluation of neonatal transport in a European country shows that regional provision is not cost-effective or sustainable and needs to be re-organised
Aim: There are three dedicated and 41 on-call neonatal emergency transport services
(NETS) in Italy, and activity levels vary dramatically. We examined the cost-effectiveness of
a hub-and-spoke NETS by looking at the costs and activity levels in the Liguria region and
established the financial needs for improving NETS across Italy.
Methods: The cost of running NETS in the Liguria region from 2012 to 2015 was
evaluated and analysed, and three different models determined the transports needed
each year to provide the best organisational model.
Results: The average number of NETS transports in the Liguria region during the study
period was 234, and the models indicated that 200\u2013350 transports per year were the
optimal amount of activity that was needed to achieve good financial performance and for
the personnel to acquire a suitable skill set. Only five of the 41 on-call Italian NETS and the
three dedicated services carried out more than 200 transports a year. Of the rest, 26
carried out up to 100 and 10 carried out 101\u2013200.
Conclusion: Italian NETS, which are managed on the basis of regional decisional
autonomy, are expensive and no longer sustainable in this era of limited financial
resources. A complete overhaul is urgently needed
The effectiveness of the neonatal diagnosis-related group scheme
none3The goal of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of the neonatal diagnosis-related group scheme in patients affected by respiratory distress syndrome. The variable costs of individual patients in the same group are examined. This study uses the data of infants (N = 243) hospitalized in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of the Gaslini Children's Hospital in Italy in 2016. The care unit's operating and management costs are employed to estimate the average cost per patient. Operating costs include those related to personnel, drugs, medical supplies, treatment tools, examinations, radiology, and laboratory services. Management costs relate to administration, maintenance, and depreciation cost of medical equipment. Cluster analysis and Tobit regression are employed, allowing for the assessment of the total cost per patient per day taking into account the main cost determinants: birth weight, gestational age, and discharge status. The findings highlight great variability in the costs for patients in the same diagnosis-related group, ranging from a minimum of €267 to a maximum of €265,669. This suggests the inefficiency of the diagnosis-related group system. Patients with very low birth weight incurred costs approximately twice the reimbursement set by the policy; a loss of €36,420 is estimated for every surviving baby with a birth weight lower than 1,170 grams. On the contrary, at term, newborns cost about €20,000 less than the diagnosis-related group reimbursement. The actual system benefits hospitals that mainly treat term infants with respiratory distress syndrome and penalizes hospitals taking care of very low birth weight patients. As a result, strategic behavior and "up-coding" might occur. We conduct a cluster analysis that suggests a birth weight adjustment to determine new fees that would be fairer than the current costs.openMarcello Montefiori; Michela Pasquarella; Paolo PetraliaMontefiori, Marcello; Pasquarella, Michela; Petralia, Paol